Better Homes Gardens USA April 2019

(Joyce) #1
April 2019 | 105

HOW TO


WORK


WITH


PAINT


■PICK JUST ONE


In this allover sage
green room, left,
the walls become a
seamless canvas
against which furniture
stands out beautifully.
Painting walls, trim,
and windows the same
color is a surefi re way
to make that color
work like a neutral.
■GO LOW SHINE
“If the goal is
neutrality, stick to
a lower sheen fi nish,
like matte or eggshell.
The glossier the
fi nish—especially if the
color is light—the more
it will pick up and
refl ect the colors around
it,” says color expert
Nivara Xaykao .■

MORE NEUTRALS


Designer Juan Carretero says,

These four make the cut.

Let us unlock the
logic of the paint
strip for you.
■TERMS
Versions of a
color lightened
with white (tints)
are at the top.
Those darkened with black (shades)
are at the bottom. Between them are the
colors mixed with gray (tones).
■MAP IT OUT For smooth tonality
in a room, pick your wall color then go
up or down two rows to fi nd a trim
color. You’ll get the defi nition that trim
gives without the potentially jarring
contrast of white or wood.
■TAKE THE TEMP The bottom color is
the most saturated, so use it to identify
a color’s temperature. Example: To fi nd
out whether a pale green in the top
spot is warm or cool, see if its darkest
version leans yellow or blue. Choose
similarly warm or cool accents.

■ (^) LOOK ACROSS ROWS In a neutral
scheme, you want all your colors to be
of a similar intensity. To get that, stick
to the same row on the paint chips.


PEACE AND


HAPPINESS


1380


Benjamin
Moore

THAI BASIL


N400-5


Behr

RAIN


SW 6219


Sherwin-Williams

BRINJAL


222


Farrow & Ball

HOW TO


READ


A PAINT


CHIP


A NEUTRAL IS ANY COLOR


VERSATILE ENOUGH TO BE


USED AS A BACKGROUND TO LAYER


OTHER COLORS ONTO.

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